Rodent control in Inwood: what to know
Inwood sits at Manhattan's northern tip beside Inwood Hill Park — the only natural forest left on the island — so homes here see more wildlife pressure (squirrels, raccoons) alongside the usual urban rodents and roaches.
Pre-war apartment stock along Dyckman Street and Seaman Avenue has the deep voids and shared plumbing that let cockroaches and mice move between units.
The park edge means seasonal mosquito and tick pressure for ground-floor and garden apartments.
How much does rat & mouse control cost in Inwood?
$200–$1,200
One-time baiting: $200–$500. Exclusion (baiting + entry-point sealing): $400–$900. Ongoing monitoring: $100–$200/month. NYC per-treatment overall: $300–$1,200 (avg ~$475). National per-visit average: $345 (range $216–$495).
| One-time baiting | $200–$500 per treatment |
| Exclusion (baiting + sealing) | $400–$900 per treatment |
| Ongoing monitoring | $100–$200 per month |
NYC pest-control pricing tends to run higher in Manhattan than in Brooklyn or Queens — tier-2 NYC industry sources cite roughly a 10–20% premium, attributed to building-access logistics (walk-ups, elevators, doorman/board approval) and labour costs. This is directional signal from industry blogs, not an independently verified figure — confirm with a quote for your specific building.
Market range — not our quote
This is a market range synthesised from published cost guides — not a quote from this provider. The actual price depends on an in-person or photo-based inspection.
Angi's $345 average (range $216–$495) is the only tier-1, NYC-geo-targeted figure found and is notably lower than the tier-2 NYC blogs' $300–$1,200 claim. Both are shown — do not collapse into a single misleadingly precise number.
What drives the price
- Baiting-only vs full exclusion (sealing entry points)
- Number of visits needed for heavy infestation (3–5 visits can total $700–$1,500)
- Building type / density
- Ongoing monitoring plan vs one-off
Signs you need rodent control
- Droppings or gnaw marks in shared basement storage, laundry rooms, or boiler rooms, not just your own kitchen
- Burrow holes or smear marks along foundation walls, especially where basements adjoin a neighbouring building
- Scratching in walls or ceilings that seems to move between apartments
- Rodent activity that returns shortly after a super's DIY bait placement — a sign the source is the shared basement, not your unit alone
- New activity coinciding with construction or renovation work on the block, which displaces existing colonies
How we treat rodent control in Inwood
Washington Heights was built up the hill in large pre-war apartment blocks, and those buildings sit close together with interconnected basements and shared service areas — boiler rooms, laundry rooms, utility chases that run wall to wall. That construction pattern gives rodents an underground travel network between buildings that a detached house or a walk-up in a lower-density neighbourhood simply doesn't have.
Norway rats burrow, they don't climb, so the story here starts below street level: foundation gaps between adjoining basements, utility penetrations, and the retaining walls that come with building on a steep hill. House mice work the same shared infrastructure at a smaller scale, moving through wall voids and pipe chases between apartments and even between buildings that share a party wall.
Local landmarks & coverage
We serve all of Inwood and the surrounding Manhattan area — including Inwood Hill Park, Dyckman Street, Isham Park — across ZIP codes 10034, 10040.